Slightly off or on topic, but since you seem to know, and I've never seen aix 370 in
the eild, did it require VM? Did it take advantage of SNA, and allow front ends, along
with SNA gateways and 3270's?
Or was it more of a hosted TCP/IP accessable system?
On March 2, 2017 2:17:00 AM GMT+08:00, Clem Cole <clemc(a)ccc.com> wrote:
On Wed, Mar 1, 2017 at 2:45 AM, Ronald Natalie < ron(a)ronnatalie.com
<mailto:ron@ronnatalie.com> > wrote:
AIX/370 was a real product.
Indeed it was.
All of these AIX versions came from the same source code and used the
IBM TCF to allow you to transparently run executables across nodes in
the cluster.
Exactly right. TCF - Transparent Computing Facility -- No mean
trick... you can mix PS/2 and 370 in the cluster, so root on desk
allowed me root on the mainframe too. What was cool was that the TCF
will look at the executable and find the proper CPU. The big mistake
was that that node id was stored in a single 32 bit word and assigned
per bit, which was a scaling issues.
I was at Locus Computing Corp (aka LCC or just "Locus"), who developed
AIX for IBM under contract and TCF was part of it. The direct result
of
the The LOCUS Distributed System Architecture
<https://www.amazon.com/Distributed-System-Architecture-Computer-Systems
/dp/0262517191/ref=sr_1_1?s=books&ie=UTF8&qid=1488391384&sr=1-1&refineme
nts=p_27%3AGerald+J.+Popek> from UCLA. The book actually describes
much of the AIX/370 work, but starts with the original UCLA work. I
did
not work on the IBM project, although a number of my peers did. I was
higher to help developed TNC - Transparent Network Computing, which is
was used in Intel's Paragon and DEC's TruClusters and a never shipped
HP
Cluster Product. Many of the same ideas but we wanted a separate team
that never saw the IBM code so there could never be any concern about
ownership. The architects like me and Roman, were allowed to talk to
the AIX architects, such as Bruce; but we keep separate development
environments at separate sites. After the IBM work ended, all of the
Locus distributed system folks the struct around went to work on TNC
and the technology go sold off and licensed. What was interesting is
that TNC was open'ed sourced after the Compaq/HP mergers and put into
Linux but I've forgotten the URL (I'll search and follow up).
It's a real shame it never went anywhere. It was a very, very cool.
The only AIX that didn’t play was the completely independent (and
in my opinion somewhat brain damaged) IBM/RT UNIX. If there was a
TCF-based RT kernel, I never saw it, even inside the IBM labs.
That was IBM politics. LCC has the contract for the original AIX
port
to the 370. When the RT was developed, the Austin team was ramped up.
One of our members of the TUHS list who is remaining silent I see is
not
saying why but I know was there ;-) and might known the actual
politics, I never did. But when the AIX/RT port was forked, they
started with AIX/370 code base and removed the TCF code. But LCC
still
had the AIX/370 contract from Enterprise system group to maintain
AIX/370. And also, Locus had the contract from Entry Systems, who all
they wanted TCF. So AIX/386 and AIX/370 as Ron points out were one
code base, one dev team (at LCC in California).
Dan Cross said: "I had understood was that AIX/370 was actually OSF/1
based"
It maybe that by the end, the user space was based on the OSF/1 user
space code. That was true for HP and DEC also. But I can definitely
state AIX/370 and AIX/386 were one set of source trees and all of was
done by Locus Computing Corporation certainly through the mid 1990s.
Clem
--
Sent from my Android device with K-9 Mail. Please excuse my brevity.